History: Type of "
History: Type of "
History: Type of "
See also: Early Canadian banking system On March 11, 1935, the central bank began operations, following the granting of Royal Assent to the Bank of Canada Act. Initially the bank was founded as a privately owned corporation in order to ensure it was free from political influence. Earlier in 1933, Prime Minister R.B. Bennett called a Royal Commission[13] and it reported in favour of a central bank. Its members consisted of Britain's chief propagandist during the early part of World War II, Lord Macmillan, who supported central banking, as well as various British and Canadian bankers. Gerald Grattan McGeer was one of the most forceful voices in Canada advocating government intervention in the monetary system and nationalizing the credit system. His vision of monetary reform predated the establishment of the Bank of Canada. Also involved was John Edward Brownlee, then Premier of Alberta, petitioning in favor of a central bank because western farmers wanted cheap credit.[14] In 1938, under Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King, it became "a special type of " Crown corporation, fully owned by the government; thus, in effect, by the Canadian taxpayers; with the governor appointed by Cabinet. Prior to the creation of the Bank of Canada, the Canadian Treasury was responsible for printing Canada's bank notes. The Bank of Montreal, then the nation's largest bank, acted as the government's banker. A major proponent was the Royal Bank of Canada, which wanted to see the government business taken away from its rival. When the central bank was founded, the government claimed it was constrained by its foreign debts and it would be less costly to borrow money if it could be repaid in debased currency. The government also claimed it was constrained by its inability to deal directly with its foreign debts. The farmers were joined by manufacturing interests and other groups in favor of a depreciating currency, all demanding a central bank. The original name the Bank of Canada (commercial) was a private bank and was renamed the Canadian Bank of Commerce. In 1949, the private banks were ordered to remove their currency from circulation and the central bank became the sole issuer of legal tender bank notes in Canada.[15] The bank played an important role in financing Canada's war effort during World War II[16] by printing money and buying the government's debt. After the war, the bank's role was expanded as it was mandated to encourage economic growth in Canada. An Act of Parliament in September 1944 established the subsidiary Business Development Bank of Canada (BDC) to stimulate investment in Canadian businesses. Prime Minister John Diefenbaker central bank monetary policy was directed towards increasing the money supply to cause low interest rates, and have full employment. When inflation began to rise in the early 1960s, the governor James Coyne ordered a reduction in the money supply. Since the 1980s, keeping inflation low has been the central bank's main priority. In the early 1990s the fractional banking rules of Canada were changed so the Bank of Canada could no longer dictate the amount of fiat currency reserves that Canadian chartered banks must own.
The mandate of the Bank of Canada is defined in the Bank of Canada Act preamble and it states, WHEREAS it is desirable to establish a central bank in Canada to regulate credit and currency in the best interests of the economic life of the nation, to control and protect the external value of the national monetary unit and to mitigate by its influence fluctuations in the general level of production, trade, prices and employment, so far as may be possible within the scope of monetary action, and generally to promote the economic and financial welfare of Canada.[2] The bank's current mission statement is: The Bank of Canada's responsibilities focus on the goals of low, stable and predictable inflation; a safe and secure currency; a stable and efficient financial system in Canada and internationally; and effective and efficient funds-management services for the Government of Canada, as well as on its own behalf and for other clients.[11] In practice, however, it has a more narrow and specific internal definition of that mandate: to keep the rate of inflation (as measured by the Consumer Price Index) between 1% and 3%. Since the Bank's creation, the average annual inflation rate was 3.13%.[17] The most potent tool the Bank of Canada has to achieve this goal is its ability to set the interest rate for borrowed money. The Bank of Canada periodically asks Statistics Canada to adjust the way the Consumer Price Index is calculated, a crucial factor in the calculation of inflation.[18] The Bank of Canada is the sole authority authorized to issue currency in the form of bank notes in Canada. The bank does not issue coins; they are issued by the Royal Canadian Mint.
$1 Bank of Canada note issued in 1935. Historically, the Bank of Canada functioned as the financier of Canadian public deficits in the Federal, Provincial, and Municipal budgets providing loans to fund government spending at interest rates as low as 1%. This practice allowed for public debts to be repaid more quickly, but at the cost of higher inflation. The growth of the federal government through the 1960s led to rapidly increasing federal deficits. As these were covered by the Bank of Canada, inflation rose steadily from 2% in 1961 to a high of 12.5% in 1974. That year, with inflation at a 20-year high, the Government of Canada abandoned this method of financing in favor of borrowing from private banks at market rates on the reasoning that paying interest on its debt was less harmful to Canadians than high inflation - a policy now followed by most advanced economies. It is important to distinguish between the right to "issue money," which is the right of the Bank of Canada, and the ability to "create credit," which, through legislation and regulation enacted by Parliament, is largely done by commercial banks through the issuance of loans. While all of Canada's money is created by the government through deficit spending, if "money" is thought of
as the combination of issued money and bank-created credit, then presently, the Bank of Canada "issues" less than 5% of Canada's money, with the remainder (95%) being "created" by commercial banks through the process of fractional-reserve bankingCanada's provinces and federal government has the right to borrow money at almost zero % from the bank of Canada, instead to borrow from other country or commercial bank at compound interest..[19]
was referenced under "securities purchased for resale" from Canada's major banks. It was termed advances to members of the Canadian Payments Association and were liquidity loans made under the Banks standing liquidity facility as well as term advances made under the Banks commitment to provide term liquidity to the Canadian financial system.[20]
Governor
The head of the Bank of Canada is the Governor, who is appointed by the Bank's Board of Directors. The Governor is appointed for a seven-year term, and can be dismissed by the government. In case of a profound disagreement between the government and the Bank, the Minister of Finance can issue written instructions for the Bank to change its policies.[2] This has never actually happened in the history of the Bank to date. In practice, the Governor sets monetary policy independently of the government.